
Chinese President Hu Jintao(L) meets with Costa Rican President
Oscar Arias(R) in San Jose, capital of Costa Rica, Nov. 17, 2008. (Xinhua/Fan
Rujun)
SAN JOSE, Nov. 17 (Xinhua) -- Visiting Chinese President Hu Jintao on
Monday spoke highly of the rapid development of China-Costa Rica relations and
pledged efforts to further expand bilateral cooperation in various fields.
During talks with Costa Rican President Oscar Arias Sanchez on the second
day of his state visit to the Central American nation, Hu said mutually
beneficial cooperation in various fields has been growing steadily.
Noting the fast growth in bilateral ties over the past year, the Chinese
president said the two countries have also carried out fruitful cooperation in
international and regional affairs.
"Facts have proven that the establishment of diplomatic ties between China
and Costa Rica conforms to the fundamental and long-term interests of both
countries and peoples," Hu said . The two countries set up diplomatic ties in
June 2007.
"The enhancement of Sino-Latin American mutually beneficial cooperation is
conducive for our common development," Hu said, noting that the Chinese
government has issued a Policy Paper on Latin America and the Caribbean
recently.
The two countries should make efforts to push for long-term, sound and
stable development of bilateral ties and cooperation, Hu said.
"China is ready to work with Costa Rica to open up a bright future for
bilateral ties characterized by mutual respect, equality, mutual benefit,
sincere cooperation and friendship for generations to come," he added.
On economic cooperation, Hu said the two countries should strengthen their
cooperation mechanisms and expand areas of cooperation.
Hu hoped the two sides would reach agreement on a free trade pact at an
early date, in the spirit of friendly consultations and mutual understanding and
accommodation.
The Chinese government will continue to encourage competent Chinese
enterprises to invest in Costa Rica, he said.
It will also support pragmatic cooperation between enterprises of the two
countries in such key areas as infrastructure, agriculture, telecommunications
and energy, he added.
Arias agreed with Hu's views and stressed the importance of strengthening
trade and economic ties with China.
Costa Rica hopes to strengthen cooperation with China in port construction,
development of high-tech parks as well as Chinese language teaching, he said.
Arias said he hoped the two countries would establish a dialogue mechanism
at a higher level so as to further promote the development of bilateral ties.
The two leaders also exchanged views on the global financial crisis and
agreed to strengthen coordination and cooperation in international affairs.
After their meeting, the two leaders witnessed the signing of 11
cooperation agreements on trade, economy, finance, energy, education and
technology, and announced the launch of bilateral negotiations on a free trade
pact.
China is Costa Rica's second biggest trading partner. In 2007, bilateral
trade amounted to 2.8 billion U.S. dollars, a 33-percentincrease over the
previous year.
The Chinese president, who is on a five-nation tour, flew in on Sunday from
Washington, where he attended a Group of 20 summit on the current international
financial crisis.
This is the fist state visit by a Chinese head of state to Costa Rica and
Central America.
He will also visit Cuba, Peru and Greece, and attend the Economic Leaders'
Informal Meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum in the
Peruvian capital of Lima.